Comments on: VIDEO: The Secret Life of Paperhttp://inhabitat.com/the-secret-life-of-paper/
Green design & eco innovation for a better worldTue, 31 Mar 2015 17:05:17 +0000hourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=3.9.1By: Inhabitat's Week in Green: Solar farms, hydrogen cars and 3D-printing in space - 2014 Online Shop Reviewshttp://inhabitat.com/the-secret-life-of-paper/comment-page-1/#comment-590407
Thu, 01 Jan 2015 09:00:37 +0000http://www.inhabitat.com/2008/08/30/the-secret-life-of-paper/#comment-590407[…] Paper is useful stuff, but it’s the scourge of forests — nearly 4 billion trees are cut down each year to make paper. Thanks to new technology funded by the US Department of Agriculture, we could soon be moving toward a paperless society. Researchers from the University of California have developed a new type of treeless, inkless paper that can be reused up to 20 times. In space news, astronauts on the International Space Station recently used a 3D printer to print out a socket wrench, marking the beginning of a new era in space-based 3D printing. The development could revolutionize not only the space station’s ability to get things done, but also the future of space exploration. If we’re going to spend more time in space, astronauts are going to need better space suits. A team of scientists is working to develop living, bacteria-filled space suits that support human life. Four decades ago, scientists from MIT developed a computer model to determine whether the path of industrialized society is leading to global collapse. They published their findings in a book, titled The Limits to Growth, which forecasts a grim outcome for humanity. The results were widely dismissed in the decades that followed, but new research finds that the book’s projections were dead on. On the green design front, the Swiss architecture firm Bureau A built a home that looks like nothing more than a large boulder, blending into the landscape in the Swiss Alps. Meanwhile, Nest, the California company best known for its smart thermostats, redesigned a gondola at the Squaw Valley ski resort, transforming the interior into an adorable, tiny “house in the sky.” The cozy space features cedar planking, Pendleton-wrapped benches, framed artwork and curtains. And in business news, eBay just became the 100th company to cut ties with ALEC, the nonprofit organization funded by corporate interests that lobbies to dilute and overturn environmental protection laws. […]
]]>